| VA'S INFECTED VETS
TO FILE FOR DISABILITY
An attorney is preparing to ask the VA
to pay disability benefits and damages for hospital mistakes that
may have exposed veterans to infectious body fluids.
NOTE from
Larry Scott, VA Watchdog dot Org
... Good strategy! Throw everything you can at the VA and
stir up a media firestorm.
All information on the infected
veterans can be found on our
Contaminated
Equipment page.
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Vets affected by VA hospital errors to file claims
By BILL POOVEY (AP)
CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. — An attorney is preparing to ask the U.S.
Department of Veterans Affairs to pay disability benefits and
damages for hospital mistakes that may have exposed veterans to
infectious body fluids — a complaint that he said could ultimately
multiply into many more such demands.
The attorney, Mike Sheppard of Nashville, said he is preparing to
file claims with the VA for about 60 veterans, including three
women.
Among them are veterans who have tested positive for HIV and
hepatitis and others who suffered emotional distress after the VA
provided them with initial positive blood tests for infections
that turned out to be wrong.
Sheppard also said other veterans among the roughly 10,000
affected former patients at VA hospitals in Murfreesboro, Tenn.,
Miami and Augusta, Ga., are likely to seek compensation beyond the
VA's offer of free medical care.
"I've gotten calls from all over the country," he said.
Sheppard said he will file medical malpractice and emotional
distress claims with the VA within 30 to 45 days. He said veterans
and veterans' relatives who have contacted him by phone from
Florida and elsewhere likely have sought out other attorneys.
The claims process differs from a traditional malpractice lawsuit
because the VA is a federal agency. The first step is to have the
patient's claim reviewed by a VA regional attorney.
"A regional attorney will look at it and decide yea or nay,"
Sheppard said. "There is one level of appeal internally then you
have a right to file a lawsuit in federal court."
The VA's regional counsel in Nashville, Tammy Kennedy, did not
return telephone messages Friday and Monday seeking comment.
Records show that between fiscal year 2004 and March 2009 the VA
denied 11,299 veterans' claims for compensation related to
hospital and medical care, while granting 3,229 claims.
The VA denied 813 such claims filed by veterans' dependents, while
granting 261 in the same period, records show.
The VA has offered free medical care to the affected veterans —
but
Sheppard
said that's no more than they already expected. He said the
requested compensation will vary greatly, depending on the
veteran's age, ailments and other factors.
"It's a case by case basis," he said.
Updated records show that among the patients who have heeded VA
warnings to get follow-up blood checks, eight have tested positive
for HIV. Twelve former patients have tested positive for hepatitis
B and 37 have tested positive for hepatitis C.
VA records show 9,141 veterans have received follow-up blood test
results among the 10,320 former patients who were warned they
might have even minimum risk of exposure.
The VA has said the errors were limited to the three facilities,
but a report released by the agency's inspector general showed
some more widespread problems. Investigators conducting surprise
inspections in May found that only 43 percent of the agency's
medical centers had standard operating procedures in place for
endoscopic equipment and could show they properly trained their
staffs for using the devices.
The VA has said for months that there is no way to prove that the
positive tests for infectious diseases stem from exposure to
improperly cleaned or erroneously rigged equipment while getting
colonoscopies at Murfreesboro or Miami or while getting treatment
at the ear, nose and throat clinic in Augusta.
In a statement, the VA expressed regret for the mistakes but also
said the agency has aggressively dealt with them, including
warning former patients who in some cases were treated five years
ago to get follow-up blood tests. The statement also said veterans
have been informed of their legal right "to submit disability
claims on account of VA negligence."
The law that governs claims for compensation includes a "benefit
of doubt" provision that in disputed cases give the claimant a
favorable decision if there is an "approximate balance of positive
and negative evidence."
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TOPICS:
veterans, veterans' benefits, VA, Department of Veterans' Affairs,
contaminated equipment, endoscopic, colonoscopy, hepatitis B,
hepatitis C, HIV, disability |